PNWguy
Well-known member
Short version:
Is there any reason to not use a self leveling concrete to fix a terrible finish job on a house, garage and shop concrete floor?
Is it strong enough and abrasion resistant enough for a shop? Nice enough for my living room floor (no floor coverings, just bare concrete)?
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Long version:
I'm building a slab on grade house & shop. I'll be doing most of the work myself, but hired a contractor to frame it and manage the concrete pour. I let the contractor pick the concrete guys, and gave him the OK after the three of us met.
The forms were done correctly and block work was great. I did my own fill and compaction, as well as under slab plumbing, vapor barrier, insulation and Pex for radiant.
Concrete crew returned for rebar and the pour. Again, everything went well. Except for the finishing crew. The floor looks like ***.
It was 100% clear from day one that the floors in the house are my finished floors. Bare concrete, probably polished, sealed and/or dyed. As they started troweling, everybody was reminded again that it was the finished floor, and was to be "glass smooth".
There are tons of trowel marks, marks where the trowel picked up a rock or dried concrete and scraped the floor. There are even boot prints. Parts of it are beautiful, and parts of it are "the apprentice got high on his first day and finished the job while everybody was at lunch".
This is a good concrete crew, and I'm assuming the owner is going to stand behind his work. Everybody has a bad day now and then - it's what happens next that matters.
I've talked to the contractor but not the concrete guy. His suggestion is a layer of self leveling concrete after we frame up the walls.
My concerns are about durability for the shop - I'll be doing automotive and metal fab work. And the concrete is the finished floor in the house. Can I dye it, seal it and such?
Thoughts?
Is there any reason to not use a self leveling concrete to fix a terrible finish job on a house, garage and shop concrete floor?
Is it strong enough and abrasion resistant enough for a shop? Nice enough for my living room floor (no floor coverings, just bare concrete)?
-------------
Long version:
I'm building a slab on grade house & shop. I'll be doing most of the work myself, but hired a contractor to frame it and manage the concrete pour. I let the contractor pick the concrete guys, and gave him the OK after the three of us met.
The forms were done correctly and block work was great. I did my own fill and compaction, as well as under slab plumbing, vapor barrier, insulation and Pex for radiant.
Concrete crew returned for rebar and the pour. Again, everything went well. Except for the finishing crew. The floor looks like ***.
It was 100% clear from day one that the floors in the house are my finished floors. Bare concrete, probably polished, sealed and/or dyed. As they started troweling, everybody was reminded again that it was the finished floor, and was to be "glass smooth".
There are tons of trowel marks, marks where the trowel picked up a rock or dried concrete and scraped the floor. There are even boot prints. Parts of it are beautiful, and parts of it are "the apprentice got high on his first day and finished the job while everybody was at lunch".
This is a good concrete crew, and I'm assuming the owner is going to stand behind his work. Everybody has a bad day now and then - it's what happens next that matters.
I've talked to the contractor but not the concrete guy. His suggestion is a layer of self leveling concrete after we frame up the walls.
My concerns are about durability for the shop - I'll be doing automotive and metal fab work. And the concrete is the finished floor in the house. Can I dye it, seal it and such?
Thoughts?


